Background of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates in general to semiconductor manufacturing and, more
particularly, to the gettering of impurities in a semiconductor.
[0002] In silicon, metal impurities, particularly the heavy metallic impurities such as
iron, copper, and nickel, can produce deep energy level sites causing undesirable
generation and recombination of minority carriers in the active regions of the substrate.
Some metal impurities diffuse very rapidly in silicon at modest temperatures, and
due to their low solubility can form precipitates. When these precipitates form at
the silicon/silicon dioxide interface, the barrier height for electron transfer from
the silicon to the oxide is reduced and the sites become high current density paths
that result in premature oxide failure. If these precipitates form at or near a reverse
biased P-N junction of the semiconductor device, leakage current from the P-N junction
will increase because of the high minority carrier generation rate. Accordingly, device
performance degrades, or the semiconductor device may fail.
[0003] The metal impurities can arise from a variety of sources. For example, metal impurities
may come from placing a material on the wafer surface during processing, or from the
processing equipment itself. Once the metal impurities reside on an exposed silicon
region of the wafer, subsequent high temperature processing allows the metal impurities
to diffuse throughout the substrate. A variety of techniques have been proposed to
reduce the concentration of contaminants including ultra clean processing, cleaning
processes and gettering.
[0004] Ultra clean processing reduces contamination in the manufacturing process thus lowering
the level of contamination that reaches the silicon substrate. Ultra clean processing
involves sophisticated ultra clean factories, and the use of ultra pure chemicals
and gases. While ultra clean processing has been successful in reducing the level
of metallic contamination, it is very costly. In addition it is merely a preventative
method and provides no means for trapping impurities that enter the silicon.
[0005] Various wet, dry and high temperature (pyrochemical) cleaning processes have been
developed. While these methods remove impurities from the substrate, some degree of
redeposition exists at the end of each cleaning process, thus limiting their effectiveness.
[0006] Substrate gettering techniques and structures have been the mainstay of the semiconductor
industry. Although several different techniques have been developed, each involves
the production of low energy sites that can trap the mobile impurities. Among the
most prevalent techniques are various forms of backside damage, including mechanical
abrasion, silicon nitride or polysilicon deposition, and argon implantation. More
recently, techniques for producing damage on the front side of substrates, but away
from active semiconductor areas, have been developed. The front side techniques tend
to be more permanent than the backside processes.
[0007] Another common method is oxygen precipitation gettering, sometimes called denuded
zone intrinsic gettering. In this method a wafer with a specific range of oxygen concentration
is processed through particular cycles of heating and cooling to produce denuded zones
near the top and bottom surfaces of the substrate and with a high concentration of
oxygen precipitates in-between the denuded zones. The oxygen precipitates serve as
gettering sites for the mobile impurities.
[0008] There are two basic gettering techniques: damage gettering and oxygen precipitate
gettering. Unfortunately, oxygen precipitate gettering is not very effective in gettering
some impurities such as iron because iron does not form stable precipitates at the
oxygen precipitate sites. Hence, the iron impurities may be re-emitted into the silicon
substrate upon subsequent processing. Damage gettering loses effectiveness with subsequent
high temperature processing which anneals much of the damage. In addition, neither
technique is applicable to gettering in polysilicon layers, separated from the substrate
by a dielectric layer.
[0009] Accordingly, a need exists for gettering mobile impurities that is applicable to
silicon and polysilicon layers where the impurities remain gettered during subsequent
processing.
Brief Description of the Drawing
[0010]
FIG. 1 illustrates a silicon substrate with reactor atoms combining with metal impurities
to form stable compounds;
FIG. 2 illustrates reactor atoms implanted in front and back surfaces of the substrate;
FIG. 3 illustrates an MOS transistor with reactor atoms implanted in the gate region;
and
FIG. 4 illustrates an MOS transistor with reactor atoms implanted in the control gate
and floating gate.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiment
[0011] Referring to FIG. 1, a silicon substrate 10 is shown having a front surface 12 and
a back surface 14. Semiconductor devices are formed in active regions 16 and 17. The
processes of forming active semiconductor devices into front surface 12, including
ion implantation, oxidation, photolithography, diffusion, cleaning, etching, and chemical
vapor deposition, are well known to those skilled in the art of silicon process technology.
[0012] During each process step, metal impurities 18 may be left at or near front surface
12. When substrate 10 is heated during processing, metal impurity 18 may penetrate
and diffuse throughout the silicon substrate very rapidly. For example, at 1000°C,
copper diffuses through thirty mils of silicon substrate in about sixty seconds. In
the absence of any appreciable concentration gradient, metal impurity 18 follows a
random path as suggested by path 20. It is desirable to keep metal impurities away
from active regions 16 and 17 to prevent generation and recombination of minority
carriers which degrades performance, or possibly causes failure of the active semiconductor
devices.
[0013] As one feature of the present invention, reactor atoms 22 are introduced into specific
regions of substrate 10. The reactor atoms do not react appreciably with the silicon
in substrate 10, and thus are substantially immobile and remain within specific regions
during subsequent processing. Reactor atoms 22, e.g. sulfur, are chosen to form stable
chemical compounds with mobile metal impurities, e.g. iron, that diffuse in close
proximity to and collide with the reactor atoms. The stable chemical compounds do
not decompose during subsequent processing, so the mobile impurities bonded in the
stable compounds remain substantially immobilized, or gettered, at the reactor atom
sites.
[0014] In the prior art, metal impurities are typically gettered by precipitation at oxygen
precipitate sites. However, some of the metal impurities are likely to detach from
their precipitate sites during subsequent processing and potentially diffuse into
the active semiconductor regions. Thus, some metal impurities gettered at oxygen precipitate
sites do not form stable precipitates. Notable among these metal impurities that do
not form stable precipitates is iron. In contrast, the present invention substantially
immobilizes the metal impurities by forming stable compounds, e.g. iron bonds with
sulfur to form FeS₂. The stable compounds formed by the present invention do not decompose
and release the metal impurities during subsequent processing steps. Metal impurities
are thus kept away from the active semiconductor regions.
[0015] In FIG. 1, reactor atom 22 is introduced into silicon substrate 10 through back surface
14. Reactor atom 22 may be introduced by ion implantation and other well known methods
such as diffusion. Reactor atom 22 is chosen to be relatively immobile in silicon
so that it remains substantially fixed in a region within substrate 10. Reactor atom
22 is chemically reactive with metal impurity atom 18. When the temperature becomes
sufficiently high, say 800-1000°C, and metal impurity 18 passes in the attractive
vicinity so as to collide with reactor atom 22, a chemical bonding occurs to form
a stable chemical compound 24. Metal impurity 18 is thus gettered to reactor atom
22 to prevent its random motion around substrate 10 and possible introduction into
active regions 16 and 17.
[0016] Reactor atom 22 is further chosen such that the chemical compound formed with metal
impurity 18 is stable during subsequent high temperature processing steps. In order
that reactor atom 22 remains free to bond to metal impurity 18, it must be chosen
so that it does not react with silicon which would be detrimental to the bonding with
metal impurity 18. Alternately, sufficient reactor atoms 22 may be introduced into
the silicon in close proximity to one another so that the solid solubility of the
reactor atoms in silicon is exceeded. Reactor atom 22 may also form more complex chemical
compounds with more than two atoms, e.g. one bond with metal impurity 18 and another
bond with a silicon atom as illustrated by the more complex chemical compound 26 of
FIG. 1.
[0017] The metal impurities 18 that are highly mobile in silicon and thus are of concern
as contaminants during semiconductor manufacture include iron, copper, nickel, zinc,
and lithium. Reactor atoms 22 that are substantially immobile in silicon and that
can form stable compounds with mobile contaminating atoms 18 are selected from Group
VIA of the periodic table. Choices of reactor atoms 22 include sulfur, selenium and
tellurium. Sulfur has a solid solubility of less than 10¹⁷/cm³ in silicon. Thus, an
implant of 2x10¹⁴/cm² of reactor atoms within a depth of 2000 angstroms giving an
average sulfur concentration of 10¹⁹/cm³ would provide sufficient free reactor atoms
to react with the mobile impurities. A sulfur source for ion implantation is sulfur
hexafluoride (SF₆) ionized in a plasma. Implant energies are the same as those commonly
utilized for donor and acceptor implant into silicon, say 20-120KV. Doses higher than
2x10¹⁴/cm² may be used where contamination is extreme.
[0018] It is important that the implanted reactor atoms combine with the metal impurity
to form a stable chemical compound. Chemical compounds with high melting points are
indicative of stable compounds. Some examples of compounds that would substantially
immobilize iron impurity atoms within typical temperature processing limits include
iron sulfide (FeS) with a melting point of 1195°C, and iron pyrite (FeS₂) with a melting
point of 1171°C. Other examples of stable compounds utilizing Group VIA reactor atoms
include Cu₂Se, Cu₂S, ZnTe, ZnSe, NiSe, Ni₃S₂ and Li₂S. In addition, multiple types
of reactor atoms may be implanted to take advantage of individual reactor atoms reactivity
with specific metal impurities. For example, sulfur and selenium reactor atoms may
be implanted to getter metal impurities copper and zinc to form stable chemical compounds
Cu₂S and ZnSe, respectively.
[0019] Turning to FIG. 2, substrate 10 is shown with reactor atoms 22 implanted through
front surface 12 into gettering regions around active regions 16 and 17. In addition,
reactor atoms 22 are introduced through back surface 14 by way of ion implantation
to form another gettering region. The gettering regions collect impurities that combine
with reactor atoms 22 contained therein to form stable chemical compounds. During
wafer processing, rapidly diffusing metal impurities may enter substrate 10 through
active regions 16 and 17 where silicon is exposed. The impurities diffuse throughout
substrate 10 and bond to reactor atoms 22 to form the stable chemical compounds, thereby
preventing generation and recombination of minority carriers in active regions 16
and 17 by the impurities.
[0020] In FIG. 3, an MOS transistor is shown fabricated in substrate 10. The MOS transistor
includes source region 36 and a drain region 38. Gate oxide layer 40 is formed above
the channel between source region 36 and drain region 38. Gate oxide layer 40 may
be composed of thermally grown or deposited layers of Si0₂. A polysilicon gate 44
is formed at interface 42 of gate oxide 40. It is known that mobile metal impurities
may be present in the polysilicon, possibly introduced during the polysilicon deposition
cycle or during subsequent processing. Reactor atoms 46 are introduced by ion implantation
into the top surface of polysilicon gate 44 to bond with the metal impurities to form
stable compounds. The reactor atoms thus getter the metal impurities and prevent the
latter from precipitating in polysilicon gate 44 adjacent to gate oxide interface
42 where they would have a detrimental effect on performance and reliability of the
MOS transistor.
[0021] FIG. 4 illustrates an MOS transistor with two polysilicon gate regions 50 and 54.
Components having a similar function are assigned the same reference numbers used
in FIG. 3. Gate region 50 is formed on gate oxide layer 40 above the channel between
source region 36 and drain region 38. Gate oxide layer 52 separates gate regions 50
and 54. Gate oxide layer 52 and polysilicon gate regions 50 and 54 form a capacitor.
Gate oxide layer 40 and interpoly gate oxide layer 52 are dielectrics composed of
thermally grown or deposited layers of Si0₂. Alternately, gate oxide layers 40 and
52 may be layered structures such as superimposed thermal and deposited Si0₂ layers,
or oxide-nitride-oxide (ONO) sandwiches. Polysilicon gate 54 operates as the control
gate for gate region 50 in a floating gate configuration of a memory device such as
an EPROM or EEPROM. Alternatively, gate region 50 may operate as the gate of an MOS
transistor having source region 36 and drain region 38.
[0022] It is desirable to keep metal impurities away from polysilicon-silicon dioxide interfaces
between gate oxide layer 40 and gate region 50, between gate region 50 and gate oxide
layer 52, and between gate oxide layer 52 and gate region 54. The metal impurities
may precipitate at the interfaces and degrade the performance of the memory device.
Accordingly, reactor atoms 56 are ion-implanted into polysilicon gate regions 50 and
54. The reactor atoms are implanted at or near the top surface of gate region 54 as
shown. The reactor atoms getter the metal impurities and prevent precipitating at
the interface between gate region 54 and gate oxide layer 52 which could have a detrimental
effect on performance and reliability of the MOS transistor.
[0023] Reactor atoms 56 are introduced into polysilicon gate region 50 in an area approximately
at one-half of its thickness. A first layer of gate region 50 is formed on gate oxide
layer 40 one-half its total thickness. The reactor atoms are ion-implanted into the
top of the first layer. The remaining thickness of polysilicon gate region 50 is then
deposited. Any mobile metal impurities entering polysilicon gate region 50 bond to
reactor atoms 56 to form stable compounds away from polysilicon-silicon oxide interfaces.
The reactor atoms thus getter the metal impurities and prevent precipitating at the
interface between gate oxide layer 52 and gate region 50, and between gate region
50 and gate oxide layer 40.
[0024] By now it should be appreciated that the reactor atoms do not react appreciably with
the silicon in substrate 10, but remain within the specific regions during subsequent
processing. The reactor atoms are chosen to form stable chemical compounds with mobile
metal impurities that diffuse in close proximity so as to collide with the reactor
atoms. The stable chemical compounds do not decompose, i.e. impurities detach from
the reactor atoms, during subsequent processing. The mobile impurities thus become
immobilized at the reactor atom sites. The reactor atoms may be introduced broadly
into the back side of the substrate, and into unused areas such as scribe grids in
the front side of the substrate. The reactor atoms may also be introduced into polysilicon
gate layers of MOS transistors.
[0025] While specific embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described,
further modifications and improvements will occur to those skilled in the art. It
is understood that the invention is not limited to the particular forms shown and
it is intended for the appended claims to cover all modifications which do not depart
from the spirit and scope of this invention.
1. A semiconductor substrate (10) comprising a gettering (14, 22) region for collecting
impurities (18) that combine to form a stable chemical compound (24).
2. The semiconductor substrate of claim 1 wherein said gettering region includes group
VIA atoms.
3. The semiconductor substrate of claim 2 wherein said group VIA atoms includes sulfur.
4. The semiconductor substrate of claim 2 wherein said group VIA atoms includes selenium.
5. The semiconductor substrate of claim 2 wherein said group VIA atoms includes tellurium.
6. The semiconductor substrate of claim 2 wherein said impurities includes iron, copper
and nickel.
7. A method of gettering impurities (18) in a semiconductor substrate, comprising the
steps of:
disposing reactor atoms (22) into the semiconductor substrate (10); and
immobilizing the impurities by combining with said reactor atoms to form a stable
chemical compound (24).
8. The method of claim 7 wherein said reactor atoms are group VIA atoms.
9. The method of claim 8 wherein said step of disposing includes the steps of implanting
said group VIA reactor atoms into the semiconductor substrate.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein said step of disposing includes the steps of diffusing
said group VIA atoms into the semiconductor substrate.